For the past five years I’ve been hiding a terrible secret from my husband. I have two credit cards with a debt totalling $8000.
I feel incredibly ashamed, especially considering our financial history together.
My husband lost his business in 2008. Before then we’d been riding a wave of success we thought would never end. Then, in six months time it was all over. We’d lost his business, our home and a car. We had a four-year-old boy and another child on the way.
We moved to a more affordable area with our tails between our legs, swearing we’d do it all differently this time. We’d both get great jobs and start over. We’d be careful with our spending. We’d structure a budget and stick to it. We’d save the money to buy another home.
And we’d be honest with each other about our spending.
Just as an FYI, you should know that this post is sponsored by myprosperity. But all opinions expressed by the author are 100% authentic and written in their own words.
The weight of my credit card debt affects every part of my life. I feel resentful towards my husband for the loss of his business and our home even though I know it wasn’t anything he could prevent. I feel ashamed of myself for breaking our pact to do things differently. I feel guilt every time we discuss money. And I feel like I have let my family down.
Despite the fact we both have good jobs we haven’t been able to buy another home. We live in a semi-affluent area where the homes are big, the schools are amazing and the lifestyle is expensive. Around here everyone has a big, beautiful home with a mortgage, a large family car, annual holidays, lifestyle, money for groceries and trumpet lessons, ballet lessons and art class for their high-achieving children.
Top Comments
1. Confess. To your husband - you need to tackle this as a team.
2. Convert. Refinance the card to a lower rate personal loan - Your repayment are set and no compound interest - You will never pay of a credit card easily if you don't throw big chunks of cash at it. Personal Loans have a timeframe.
3. Cancel. Cancel the account, not just pay it off - Don't leave the temptation of a card sitting around with credit on it.
My partner had a debt that just crept up on him- its awful and the trust is damaged. He'll properly forgive you but first thing is move out of that area- sounds like a consumer haven- rent smaller no yard - learn to cook to a budget make friends who embrace being frugal and challenge each other to come up with table top herbs group buy veggies at markets aim to be free from paid coffee and organised children entertainment - let kids be kids - be genuine from today. Change your circle of friends to include others who work at the comunity garden volunteer a little- the sense of working for the joy instead of money is a great feeling. First step - confess! Share your life compleatly with your partner! And focus on the make up "hugs" rather then his initial anger and disappointment - you can be a strong couple if you share the journey!